Don't miss an ALL NEW episode of Deadliest Catch, Tuesday at 9PM e/p, only on Discovery.
Catch MORE Deadliest Catch at http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/deadliest-catch-season6-episode10/#mkcpgn=ytdsc1
All hell breaks loose as the fleet battles a monster Bering Sea storm.

In one of Russia's biggest maritime tragedies, over sixty people died in April when the factory ship the Dalniy Vostok sank quickly in the frigid waters off Kamchatka Peninsula. Investigators blamed "greed and corruption" after the ship was pulled down by 80 tons of fish. By sheer coincidence, Andrew Tkach and a crew from National Geographic visited the original ship when it flew the flag of the USSR to document what was then the only big American Soviet joint venture. The film captures how ordinary Americans and Russians managed to overcome the hostility of their governments and work together on the high seas.

Wanna see a bunch of gold? Watch this a amazing clean-up of gold concentrates that Spencer Phillips dredged from the Bering Sea near Nome, Alaska. Nuggets of gold and gold fines in abundance.
I would like to thank Spencer and Steve Phillips who invited me to visit with them in Nome Alaska and at their gold claims "Phillip's Gold Camp" on the Casadepaga river.
For more information on the Phillips Gold Camp please visit here: http://bit.do/phillipsgoldcampinfo
I would also like to thank Garrett Metal Detectors for their continued support of my video making and exploring hobby.
Garrett Detectors:
http://bit.do/ChiggsChoiceMetalDetectors

We are in the Bering Sea, up just north of St Paul Island.. This storm had winds gusting to 70 knots, pushing 30"-40" seas This 90' boat had nowhere to hide and it was too rough to get into the harbor on the Island.. They had been taking on water and thought they had the flooding under control. A steep wave hit them rolling the boat and shifting the water to one side, in turn rolling the vessel over and it was gone just like that.

Captain Wild Bill learned the golden rule his first year on the sea.
Stream Full Episodes of Deadliest Catch:
https://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/deadliest-catch/
Subscribe to Discovery:
http://bit.ly/SubscribeDiscovery
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/DeadliestCatch
https://www.facebook.com/Discovery
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DeadliestCatch
https://twitter.com/Discovery

A Superhighway Across The Bering Strait - Classic Documentary.
A Bering Strait crossing is a hypothetical bridge and/or tunnel spanning the relatively narrow and shallow Bering Strait between the Chukotka Peninsula in Russia and the Seward Peninsula in the U.S. state of Alaska. The bridge or tunnel would provide a connection linking North America (and potentially South America, see: Darién Gap) with Asia, Africa and Europe.
Read More: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bering_Strait_crossing

Life on the Bering Sea is one of the most treacherous and rewarding ways to make a living. For Captain Sean Dwyer, the youngest captain in the region, it’s all he knows—after learning the ropes, he took over the family-run fishing business from his father at an early age. Follow along as the captain and his crew battle the elements and mental challenges of a life at sea. — Presented by Huckberry and XTRATUF
SHOP NOW: http://bit.ly/huckberry-x-xtratuf
WHO WE ARE: Huckberry is a 1 million+ adventure community. We deliver the coolest gear at the best prices, inspirational stories, and a hell of a lot more to your inbox every week. Membership is free and takes seconds. Free shipping on US orders $98+ and easy, free returns

https://www.johnsabella.com/detail.lasso?title=650712
It was just another day at the office on the Bering Sea on the afternoon of October 20, 2002, with 20-foot seas and 30-knot winds. There were 25 men and a woman aboard the 190-foot freezer longliner Galaxy when the crew detected smoke on multiple decks. Within four minutes, the first violent explosion rocked the vessel and blew three members of the starboard fire team through the gear setting hatch at the stern and 30 feet through the air, into the frigid water. Even as he exhorted his crew to focus their minds on survival, Captain Dave Shoemaker, the ex-Marine and devout Christian, knew they were too far from civilization for credible hope of rescue. With his radios melting off the wheelhouse bulkheads and most of his survival gear consumed in flames, Shoemaker battled insurmountable odds and his own certainty that he and his crewmates were about to die. Today, he uses the term divine intervention to explain the VHF contact that enabled all but three of them to survive their journey to the gates of Hell and back. Now, hear the story straight from Captain Shoemaker's lips. It's a narrative every seaman should hear, and heed. Lessons from the Galaxy offers incontrovertible proof that safety training is a critical aspect of vessel operations, because it can happen to you. This is an educational DVD that will make your crew sit up and take notice.

Alaska Crab Fishing Jobs | Bering Sea King Crabbing
The dangers of crabbing in Alaska are very real. The Bureau of Labor Statistics usually ranks Alaskan crab fishing the occupation with the highest mortality rate (300:100,000). Most of these deaths are reported as death by drowning or from hypothermia. Additionally, many more people each year are injured and crippled due to the machinery in use onboard. One of the reasons crabbing in Alaska is so dangerous is because it takes place during the winter months, when crab harvests are at their highest. During the winter, waters are colder, storms are more frequent and the ocean is considerably more difficult to manage. Up until about 2005 the crab industry in Alaska ran on a derby system. This system meant that at the opening date for the season boats left for harvest and crabbed until the quota was met for the year and the crabbing fleets were called in. Fishermen would crab 24 hours a day with crews resting very little in order to catch as much as they could as fast as they could. This added to the human error aspect in the dangers of crabbing and also contributed to many deaths. These hours and risks were considered well worth the pay when a deckhand on a crabbing boat could fetch anywhere from $50,000 – $100,000 during a season.

Join me as I watch and learn from Spencer Phillips and Jimmy Eckroth how they dredge for gold in the Bering Sea near Nome Alaska. In this video I show their dredges and Jimmy videos his work on the sea floor. I also meet some "interesting" characters on the beach. This is part one of a two part series. Up next I will show how they clean up their concentrates and you'll see A LOT of gold!
I would like to thank Spencer and Steve Phillips who invited me to visit with them in Nome Alaska and at their gold claims "Phillip's Gold Camp" on the Casadepaga river.
For more information on the Phillips Gold Camp please visit here: http://bit.do/phillipsgoldcampinfo
I would also like to thank Garrett Metal Detectors for their continued support of my video making and exploring hobby.
Garrett Detectors:
http://bit.do/ChiggsChoiceMetalDetectors

A massive storm in the Bering Sea, off the western Alaska coast and to the east of Russia, strengthened enough to be considered the strongest storm that the turbulent region has ever seen. It may not be an official record, however, as the minimum central pressure of 924 millibars was estimated by meteorologists, since the storm is over the open ocean off the Kamchatka Peninsula.
http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/YRWNztLIhy4/
http://www.wochit.com

Pelagic (mid-water) trawling for pollock fish. This is a compilation of still shot and video edited to show a typical fishing experience on this type of commercial trawler in Alaska from start to finish. Unfortunately there is no audio. This video was made in 2006 on F/V Highland Light.
Pollock is a white fleshed fish used for fish sticks, fillet 'o fish, and also a main ingredient in surimi (artifical crab). Other byproducts include fishmeal (fertilizer and animal feed) and fish oil.

With warm water drifting into the normally chilly Bering Sea, the whole fishery has been affected. Find out how the Captains are planning to stay on the crab.
#DeadliestCatch
New episodes Tuesdays 9/8c on Discovery
http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/deadliest-catch/
Subscribe to Discovery:
http://bit.ly/SubscribeDiscovery
Step aboard the fishing vessels of DEADLIEST CATCH for an immersive 360° panoramic experience!
http://www.deadliestcatch360.com/
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/DeadliestCatch
https://www.facebook.com/Discovery
Follow on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DeadliestCatch
https://twitter.com/Discovery
Check out the Test Tube App | http://testu.be/1ndmmMq

We spent a day ice crabbing on the Bering Sea with a couple of fishermen from Nome. Tony Shelp narrates a day on the ice shelf near Nome, Alaska, as he and his helper, Duane Johnson haul in their catch of Norton Sound King Crab

With the very intitiation of NAWAPA in North America, politically and economically, the land connection of the continents of America and Eurasia is placed on the agenda. The connection via the Bering Strait, a project that was first proposed in the middle of the 19th century, would lead highways and rail track through a tunnel underneath the icy ocean waters, and would include a gas pipeline, as well as power transmission and communications lines.
Construction of the Bering Strait Tunnel is an active agenda of many of the most important nations in that region.
One of the international specialists on planning and constructing infrastructure projects of this scale and kind, is Dr. Hal Cooper. Dr. Cooper has inspired and performed extensive feasibility studies on the rail and tunnel project for the Bering Strait, the rail connections within Alaska and Canada, as well as numerous other projects.
Dr. Sergei Cherkasov is a further international specialist for such projects. Cherkasov works at the State Geological Vernadsky Museum in Moscow, which is part of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He is a leading expert on questions of raw materials in the scientific tradition of Vladimir Vernadsky and Dmitri Mendeleyev, and is active in several international working groups on surveying undiscovered mineral deposits.

Captain Sean Dwyer worked so hard his first season that crabs invaded his dreams!
Stream Full Episodes of Deadliest Catch:
https://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/deadliest-catch/
Subscribe to Discovery:
http://bit.ly/SubscribeDiscovery
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/DeadliestCatch
https://www.facebook.com/Discovery
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DeadliestCatch
https://twitter.com/Discovery

With The summer season over, 3 teams of miners dive under the ice to dredge gold on the floor of the Bering Sea. Subscribe to Discovery TV for more great clips:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=DiscoveryTV
Follow Discovery on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/DiscoveryUK

Captain Sig has a story that will change the way you see mouthwash.
Stream Full Episodes of Deadliest Catch:
https://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/deadliest-catch/
Subscribe to Discovery:
http://bit.ly/SubscribeDiscovery
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/DeadliestCatch
https://www.facebook.com/Discovery
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DeadliestCatch
https://twitter.com/Discovery

The mainland coast of Alaska is visible at first. Then parts of the Diomede Islands come into view. The border between the U.S. and Russia is between these islands, which are 2.4 miles apart. The small island with a prominent profile is Fairway Rock.

http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/deadliest-catch-phil-harris-moments/
Discovery mourns the loss of dear friend and colleague Captain Phil Harris. We share our tremendous sadness over this loss with the millions of viewers who followed Phil's every move. We send our thoughts and prayers to Phil's sons Josh and Jake and the Cornelia Marie crew.
New episodes every Tuesday 9 PM ET/PT! Watch more at http://discovery.com/catch
Season 4, Part 5: The crews return for the January 2008 opilio crab season. But, the conditions are much worse and some boats face mechanical malfunctions.

A documentary film by Claire Roberge and Guy Lavoie.
This is the long trailer for the film - a human adventure meeting the indigenous people of the North. Join Claire and Guy aboard their steel-hulled sailboat, BALTHAZAR as they sail 7000 nautical miles from Gaspé, Quebec Canada to Alaska's Bering Sea via Greenland and the legendary Northwest Passage.
Buy/Rent full 81-minute documentary at https://vimeo.com/ondemand/northwestpassage
AND
http://www.thesailingchannel.tv/product/northwest-passage-greenland-to-the-bearing-sea/
Includes English and French language versions.

BERING SEA GOLD ~ "SITTING DRY”
Tagiuk Gold Youtube channel -https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDFmyDxpLnU7lDO6C5Y4shQ
Like to Support THIS CHANNEL?
Completing ANY Amazon.com purchases using this amazon link helps support this channel ~ https://amzn.to/2Lnz4KZ
We are part of the amazon affiliate program and earn a small commission from use of the link provided.
Follow us on Facebook~https://www.facebook.com/GOLD-RUSH-News-1064352436993929/
Become a Patron~ https://www.patreon.com/bePatron?c=1510514&rid=2336846
More ways to Support us ~ Shop Gold Rush Products here- https://www.zazzle.com/gold_rush_apparel/products?st=date_created
Check out My other channel, American Chopper News Here ~https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRxGT7vbTO4fPsIfpn0Qn8w?view_as=subscriber
All other business inquiries email us ~ [email protected]

#DeadliestCatch | Tuesdays at 9/8c
Low quotas and the elimination of the bairdi fishing season have presented new problems for the Deadliest Catch captains. It means an uncertain future for the crab fishermen on the Bering Sea.
Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Discovery GO: https://www.discoverygo.com/deadliest-catch/
Get the latest on your favorite captains:
http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/deadliest-catch/
Subscribe to Discovery:
http://bit.ly/SubscribeDiscovery
Step aboard the fishing vessels of DEADLIEST CATCH for an immersive 360° panoramic experience!
http://www.deadliestcatch360.com/
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/DeadliestCatch
https://www.facebook.com/Discovery
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DeadliestCatch
https://twitter.com/Discovery

Four days sailing north across the Bering Sea to reach the gold-rush town of Nome where we meet today’s miners, try to catch a salmon, spot nesting birds, and encounter herds of muskoxen – a true denizen of the Arctic. (July 2015)

Men and women have at their disposal an array of resources for generating greater knowledge of truth so that their lives may be ever more human. Among these is philosophy, which is directly concerned with asking the question of lifes meaning and sketching an answer to it. Philosophy emerges, then, as one of noblest of human tasks. According to its Greek etymology, the term philosophy means "love of wisdom". Born and nurtured when the human being first asked questions about the reason for things and their purpose, philosophy shows in different modes and forms that the desire for truth is part of human nature itself. It is an innate property of human reason to ask why things are as they are, even though the answers which gradually emerge are set within a horizon which reveals how the different human cultures are complementary.

Philosophys powerful influence on the formation and development of the cultures of the West should not obscure the influence it has also had upon the ways of understanding existence found in the East. Every people has its own native and seminal wisdom which, as a true cultural treasure, tends to find voice and develop in forms which are genuinely philosophical. One example of this is the basic form of philosophical knowledge which is evident to this day in the postulates which inspire national and international legal systems in regulating the life of society.
Nonetheless, it is true that a single term conceals a variety of meanings. Hence the need for a preliminary clarification. Driven by the desire to discover the ultimate truth of existence, human beings seek to acquire those universal elements of knowledge which enable them to understand themselves better and to advance in their own self-realization. These fundamental elements of knowledge spring from the wonder awakened in them by the contemplation of creation: human beings are astonished to discover themselves as part of the world, in a relationship with others like them, all sharing a common destiny. Here begins, then, the journey which will lead them to discover ever new frontiers of knowledge. Without wonder, men and women would lapse into deadening routine and little by little would become incapable of a life which is genuinely personal.